Archive for August, 2006

Strip Poker

Thursday, August 31st, 2006

Is gambling better than sex? Some people equate money to power. Money can give you a lot of power. But it can also strip you of the power if you lose it. Some gamblers would rather gamble than have sex. Not me, I want it all.

I have had some of my deepest and most intense orgasms after winning big at a casino or a poker table. There is something about money and sex that go together. Money is quite the aphrodisiac.

The first man I married was over 30 years older than me. I was young and a bit of a bimbo when it came to men. He was a gambler, distinguished and loved Blackjack.

He liked to have me around because I looked good on his arm and I knew how to gamble. It gave us something to talk about. Sex was very plain and we did not have it very often.

But the gambling was sensational!

There is a balance you have to achieve. It’s like most things in life. Too much of the same thing becomes boring. Can you imagine winning every hand of Texas Holdem or
Blackjack you played? Can you imagine having sex 24 hours a day? Hell, I’d miss the action in the casino. Just like I’d miss the action in the bedroom if I stayed in the casino
24 hours a day.

I can remember the first time I associated sex with gambling. I was eighteen years old and at my boyfriend Big Mike’s house. We were all alone as his parents had gone out of town to a funeral. We were playing Blackjack for pennies and then Big Mike asked me if I wanted to play strip poker.

I agreed – after all, Big Mike wasn’t called Big Mike for nothing. This was the first and only time I ever cheated at gambling. I was a much better poker player than Big Mike.

But I never won a hand and he had me naked in minutes. What happened next I’ll leave to your imagination.

Copyright 2005 Pamela Pompeii. All rights reserved.

Pamela Pompeii is the resident article writer for gambleonthis.com gambleonthis.com

Online Poker Tournaments — Time to get aboard

Thursday, August 31st, 2006

Online poker tournaments are skyrocketing in popularity due to reasons ranging from low buyins into major tournaments for a fraction of their usual cost to those who do not live within driving distance of a land based poker room. (And of course another factor is the money that can be won.) The Internet has changed where and when one can play. This revolution in how the game is played has resulted in millions of dollars being placed into online poker tournaments and satellite poker tournaments, with more opportunities on the Net coming up each week.

Poker as a “sport” is widely enjoyed by millions around the world due to the necessary level of quick thinking, skill and challenge of the game. For those who don′t understand, what makes it a game of skill is this, the element of luck is in the draw of the cards, but the skill is in how those cards are played. Too many times on televised tournaments you can see extremely bad hands winning because of how the hands were handled in a case-by-case situation by the player. Anyone can get lucky for a good run or even enough to win a tournament, but over time the skill level of a player will reflect their number of victories and the amount of winnings taken home.

What fundamentals does a poker player need to know before playing tournaments over the Internet? Here are some tips:

Make sure you are ready. Practice in regular play over the Internet as much as possible. This is what lets you gain years of playing experience in a matter of months. Many young players in their 20’s are doing well against top players and this is one of the big ways of how they get their knowledge so fast.

Take the time to invest in learning strategies, techniques and how to read players. Purchasing a few books written by experienced top players is a better investment than playing at a table without an idea of what is going on. Combining the two will enable you to play a solid game and wait for others to make mistakes and bust out. And know how to adjust your playing strategy when the blinds increase.

Surrender in order to survive. It does not make sense to play marginal hands in a tournament if you don’t have to. Unless you know you have a winning hand, it may be wiser to fold. The chips you save may help you to win a larger amount when you get a superior hand. For the first few rounds in a tournament, you are trying to survive while others are being eliminated.

Take the time to understand when a player is “pot committed”. When a player is pot committed, they have so much invested that it makes it hard to back away from folding or putting more chips in. Knowing to watch for this will enable you to put on more pressure when you know you have a superior hand. It should also help you know when to abandon a hand so that you do not place yourself in a situation when it becomes hard to back away.

Finally, keep a written record to track your play and earnings. It will help you to focus in order to become a better player. This lets you stay on track and forces you to ask yourself if you are playing the best game you can play.

Tom Howze is a webmaster for 7 sites that relate to online gambling, World Series of Poker and World Poker Tour events and updates. For more information, please visit

Tournament Blackjack and the Art of Sabotage

Thursday, August 31st, 2006

I was recently invited to play in the Daily Invitational Blackjack Tournament at Foxwoods Casino in Connecticut. Tournament blackjack differs a great deal from the regular version, and my tournament strategy would - at best - be considered a work-in-progress. I’ve played in a few in the past, though, and had a lot of fun time and again, so I headed up to ‘The Woods’ for the day.

Their tournament structure is pretty straight-forward. Each player begins each round with 5,000 in tournament chips, and a preliminary round is played. If a player has the most chips at their table after 25 hands he advances to the semifinals. In the semis, the player with the most chips after 25 hands goes to the final table. At the final table everyone’s in the money the player with the most chips after 25 more hands would win $5,000 in cash.

I had just barely squeaked by in the preliminary round to win my session. Me and two other players were neck-neck-and-neck going into the final few hands. One of the ladies I was up against busted out with one hand to go, while I got a blackjack on my big bet, pulling me ahead with a decent chip lead. It came down to my opponent going all-in and needing to win her hand to beat me out for the session.

She had a hard 14 against a dealer’s ace - big trouble. She had practically no choice but to hit as I helplessly stood there holding my breath. I chant to myself, “Break! Break! Break,” and the dealer delivered my opponent the news. Nine. Game over.

I was the only finisher for that session with about 2,700 in chips. A pretty ugly session all in all, but a win’s a win. That session was the kind of nail-biter that left me tingling all over, and it’s that rush that brings be back with every invite they send me. That, and the fact that they tend to draw spectators is pretty nice, too!

My semifinal round would turn out to be the most memorable. It seems I wasn’t quite done with the ugly winning just yet.

Many tournament strategists recommend players start out conservatively for the round. Most of us weren’t very conservative, but we weren’t very aggressive, either. I started betting 700-900 a hand and cards were going my way the first several hands. Blackjacks were dropping right in front of me, and got some really good double down hands. I just went with the flow, and before long I had a lead of about 4,000 on the nearest contender. The other players had some catching up to do, so at this point, I decided to try for a little fun, hopefully at my opponents’ expense.

I started to play low - betting smaller than the others with the hope that everyone loses the hand. I bet the minimum of 100 while the others went for 1000-1500 to catch up to me. It wasn’t so much about me winning or losing the hand since I only bet 100. If the other players lost, it would increase my chip lead. One hand I had a hard 16 versus the dealer’s 6. In a regular live game, of course, no one would EVER even think of touching the hand. I decided to hit - amid gasps and groans from the other contestants, of course - and busted with 26.

It turns out, that just as I was hoping, I ‘took the dealer’s bust card’ and ’sabotaged’ the hand. If I left my hand alone like I very well should have, the dealer would’ve broke and everyone would’ve won. Instead she drew to 20 and everyone lost. My opponents were clearly rattled and a sea of dirty looks shot my way.

Next hand, I got an 11 against a 6. Again, I had a 100 bet so I was more focused on the others losing. I didn′t double down the hand. I didn′t even hit the hand. I decided to stay on the 11. The ensuing Jack that was meant for me helped the dealer make a tidy 21. Everyone lost again, and all of a sudden I had a 9,000 point chip lead. Everyone is now furious!

I had such a large chip lead at that point, I practically cruised through the rest of the session. I won the session by 11,000 points and made it to the final table, but not before getting a tongue lashing from one of my opponents.

“I′ve never seen anyone play the way you did.”

“What? Are you talking about that ’sixteen versus six’ hand?”

“Yeah. That was really, really nasty. Really nasty! You don′t play much, do you?”

“Oh, I play all the time.”

“You’d get beaten up [at the regular tables] if you played like that.”

“Of course I would. I would never play like that regularly.”

From there she went into this whole sob story about “doing these tournaments to have a good time″ and that I “ruined the fun for her.”

“Look, this is a tournament. A tournament that’s paying five grand in cash money to the winner! So, I did what I had to do to win, and now I′m off to the finals. Trust me, it was nothing personal.”

In all fairness, let me stress that the ’sabotage′ tactic doesn’t really work, at least not in the long run. Any reputable blackjack player knows a ’saboteur’ is just as likely to hurt the table than he is to help it. A sad fact of the matter is that the average blackjack player is bogged down in superstition - ‘taking the dealer’s bust card’ is just one of dozens of them - so the whole idea of sabotaging hands is merely a psychological trick.

If you play low and try to rattle ‘the flow of the cards’ (I’ll go into ‘card flow’ and all the other blackjack superstitions at another time) more often than not one of two things will happen. You ’save’ the table with your bad play, and your opponents will think “OK, he’s an idiot, but I’m not mad at him because he made me win.” Or, if you kill the table, you′re right where you want to be - inside your opponents’ heads.

An observation I’ve made through several years at the tables is that anger and frustration can rattle even the most disciplined player. Many times - as was the case with my opponents this particular day - this causes them to bet more aggressively than they probably should, and make riskier double down plays and splits to offset your earlier ‘mistake,’ which usually paves the way to self-destruction. On the last hand that sealed the fate of my nearest rival in the semis, She doubled down a 7 against a dealer’s 7 and lost it all.

If a down-and-dirty approach to gambling is your cup of tea, perhaps you should give this strategy a shot.

In case you were wondering, I went on to finish in 5th place for the tournament.

Until next time, best of luck to you in the casinos, and in life.

Shawn Tinling runs 21 Nights Entertainment ( 21nights.com 21nights.com), a casino entertainment and events company in New York City. He’s an avid player and full-time casino events dealer.

MASH (Season 6) DVD Review

Thursday, August 31st, 2006

Based on a Richard Hooker novel of the same name, MASH was released in 1970 as a full-length feature film by 20th Century Fox before experiencing widespread success as a groundbreaking television sitcom in the Fall of 1972. The show’s brilliant integration of drama and comedy made it one of the most celebrated shows in TV history, culminating in an eleven year prime time series stint. The 1983 series finale of MASH made history as the program with the single largest audience in television history, beating out several SuperBowls and the fabled “Who Shot J.R.” episode of Dallas. With the proliferation of new television mediums, it’s a record likely to never be broken…

The sitcom is set in South Korea during American involvement in the Korea War (with M*A*S*H standing for “Mobile Army Surgical Hospital”). Buffered from the front lines by a mountain range and a minefield, the men and women of MASH were tasked with patching up wounded American soldiers. Unique to its genre, the cast of MASH was unusually large. Surgeons Dr. Benjamin Pierce (Alan Alda) and Dr. “Trapper” John McIntyre (Wayne Rogers) play the roles of excellent doctors who enjoy women and booze, while Dr. Frank Burns (Larry Linville) and Nurse Practitioner Margaret “Hot Lips” Houlihan (Loretta Swit) play foil to the two men’s shenanigans (due to a contract dispute, Rogers’ character was later replaced by Dr. B.J. Hunnicutt - played by Mike Farrell). The character of Frank Burns was also later replaced by Dr. Charles Emerson Winchester (David Ogden Stiers)…

Corporal Max Klinger (Jamie Farr) provides comic relief with his early attempts to procure a discharge by dressing in women’s clothing, and Father Francis Mulcahy (William Christopher) adds flavor to a diverse cast of characters. Also rounding out the cast are Lt. Col. Henry Blake (McLean Stevenson), Corporal Walter “Radar” O′Reilly (Gary Burghoff), and Col. Sherman Potter (Harry Morgan)…

The MASH (Season 6) DVD offers a number of hilarious episodes including the season premiere “Fade Out, Fade In” in which Frank Burns is arrested while on leave and eventually gets a transfer. His replacement is Major Charles Emerson Winchester III, who quickly makes an impression on Hawkeye and B.J… Other notable episodes from Season 6 include “In Love and War” in which a nurse arrives in the camp who may have once had a romance with Hot Lips’ husband, and “The Merchant of Korea” in which Charles is persuaded to play poker (first winning big, and then, losing it all)…

Below is a list of episodes included on the MASH (Season 6) DVD:

Episode 121 (Fade Out, Fade In) Air Date: 09-20-1977
Episode 122 (Fallen Idol) Air Date: 09-27-1977
Episode 123 (Last Laugh) Air Date: 10-04-1977
Episode 124 (War of Nerves) Air Date: 10-11-1977
Episode 125 (The Winchester Tapes) Air Date: 10-18-1977
Episode 126 (The Light That Failed) Air Date: 10-25-1977
Episode 127 (In Love and War) Air Date: 11-01-1977
Episode 128 (Change Day) Air Date: 11-08-1977
Episode 129 (Images) Air Date: 11-15-1977
Episode 130 (The M*A*S*H Olympics) Air Date: 11-22-1977
Episode 131 (The Grim Reaper) Air Date: 11-29-1977
Episode 132 (Comrades in Arms: Part 1) Air Date: 12-06-1977
Episode 133 (Comrades in Arms: Part 2) Air Date: 12-13-1977
Episode 134 (The Merchant of Korea) Air Date: 12-20-1977
Episode 135 (The Smell of Music) Air Date: 01-03-1978
Episode 136 (Patient 4077) Air Date: 01-10-1978
Episode 137 (Tea and Empathy) Air Date: 01-17-1978
Episode 138 (Your Hit Parade) Air Date: 01-24-1978
Episode 139 (What’s Up, Doc?) Air Date: 01-30-1978
Episode 140 (Mail Call Three) Air Date: 02-06-1978
Episode 141 (Temporary Duty) Air Date: 02-13-1978
Episode 142 (Potter’s Retirement) Air Date: 02-20-1978
Episode 143 (Dr. Winchester and Mr. Hyde) Air Date: 02-27-1978
Episode 144 (Major Toppo) Air Date: 03-27-1978

About the Author

Britt Gillette is author of The DVD Report, a thedvdreport.blogspot.com movie review site where you can find more reviews like this one of the thedvdreport.blogspot.com/2006/02/mash-season-6-dvd.html MASH (Season 6) DVD Review.

How To Win The Football Pools

Wednesday, August 30th, 2006

I would like to introduce a proven way to win on the UK Football Pools. This method involves using a piece of software that I created a few years back. It is called Instant Permutation Generator (IPG). This program will let you design and create your own unique Treble Chance Perms in seconds. (Literally thousands) I can make one in less than 30 seconds -honestly. It is extremely simple to use, but very powerful. It is designed for Littlewoods, Vernons, Zetters and Brittens - although the latter two are probable the best as far as outlay is concerned.


I include five proven methods of obtaining score draws and also 20 Free IPG ready made perms.


It isn’t a get rich quick scheme, but it is very possible that one can hit the jackpot on any given week. I myself have won many times, although I have been half a point away from winning the jackpot.


It is an absolute must for any syndicate - I strongly advise groups to use this complete system. As you can expect, with a group it is possibe to enter a very large amount entries and so dramatically increasing the chances of winning.


Unlike many other systems, this is not a load of old hype. It can be used for the UK and Aussie football pools and all year round as well!


If you would like more information on this system, you can visit the following website:

How To Play Violin

Wednesday, August 30th, 2006

This article gives the essential basics for how to play the violin. Generally violins are quite commonly available instruments and it is reasonably easy to rent or buy a violin. Children may need smaller violins (from an eighth, quarter, half, three-quarters, seven-eighths up to full size) to accommodate smaller hands if they are going to be learning over an extended period.

The Basics

The bow is held in the right hand with the thumb bent underneath the frog to support it and the other hands loosely gripping the wood. There are many different holds and it its important to find one that suits your hand size and strength. The violin is held with the left hand, with the chin on the chin rest supporting most of the weight, and the fingers loosely coiled around the neck of the violin. The thumb should be relaxed but firm. The left elbow should be curved under the violin. The violin should be roughly horizontal and the right arm held high. The main methods of playing the violin are bowed and pizzicato.

Bowed

The bow should be drawn swiftly and smoothly across the strings, about halfway between the fingerboard and the bridge. A down bow starts with the hand close to the strings pulling across the string from left to right, and is generally used on strong beats. An up bow goes the opposite way, right to left, and is used on weaker beats and upbeats. However with practice down bows and up bows should be fairly difficult to distinguish. Slurs in music indicate that all notes within a slur should be played in the same bow movement. To play loud notes, the bow is pressed down harder on the string using the index finger or the bow is drawn across the string faster. To play more quietly use less pressure or draw the bow across the string slower. In classical music bowed music is indicated by the Italian term arco.

Pizzicato

To play pizzicato (often abbreviated to pizz.) the right thumb should be placed under the fingerboard and the index finger used to pull the string quickly upwards and across. For faster passages, the bow can be held while playing pizzicato, still using the index finger but without the support of the thumb. In more complex and advanced pieces, a small cross above the stave indicates the fingers of the left hand plucking the strings.

Fingering and positions

As there are no physical aids such as frets for violinists as there are for guitarists, accurate tuning comes with immense practice. On a full size violin, the tones are roughly two centimeters apart, but this is difficult to judge when playing since you are seeing from a different perspective. To aid tuning, it is very helpful to have a piano or other keyboard instrument when practicing.

The fingers of the left hand are conventionally named first (index finger) to fourth (little finger). When playing notes other than open strings (G, A, D and E), these fingers must press down hard, so that the string is shortened convincingly for a higher pitch. The standard intervals taught to beginners is tone, tone, semitone, tone (ie. G-A-B-C-D, D-E-F#-G-A, A-B-C#-D-E, and E-F#-G#-A-B). Of course the notes in between can be played by rearranging the hand position.

This is known as first position, where the first finger plays up to a tone above the open string. The next position usually taught is third position, where the first finger plays the note a perfect fourth above the open string (so, for example, third position on the A string would start on the D). All positions from first up to anywhere around tenth can be thus played, and two octaves on one string are considered fairly standard.

Looking for information about the violin?
Go to: mrviolin.com mrviolin.com
‘Mr Violin’ is published by Helen Baxter -
The Complete A to Z Of Violin Resources!

Check out more violin articles at: mrviolin.com/archive mrviolin.com/archive

The Funny Thing About Humor

Wednesday, August 30th, 2006

Did you ever have one of those days?

The kind where you can’t see the humor in anything, no matter how hard you try?

That’s how my day started out. I got out of bed (that was my first mistake) at 7 am. After fifty cups of coffee and 49 trips to the bathroom, I sat down to the computer to write.

It wasn’t happening. I think I wrote the same paragraph fourteen times, juxtaposed, rewrote, edited, deleted, added more words, then deleted everything and began again.

I wonder if Erma Bombeck ever had that problem. She was always funny. My lips always began to curve upward the moment I spotted her byline at the top of her column.

I wonder if other humorists have this problem.

Maybe it’s just the state of things…

In order to write humor, one must think funny. A hard thing to do in this day and age, when everything seems to be falling apart like a stale cracker.

Maybe it’s the price of gasoline…

No longer can we country folk afford the luxury of going out for a Sunday drive. We have to make one trip into town count for the entire week. We have to grocery shop, do our banking, go sightseeing, eat out, see a movie, pick up the grand kids, go visit Aunt Vienne, go to the library, attend church services, browse through the flea market, then pray all the way home that we have enough fumes left in the gas tank to get the car all the way into the driveway.

And Nixon once made the statement that gas would NEVER exceed the price of one dollar per gallon. Oh yeah, he also said “I am NOT a crook!”…

Then again, Maybe it’s a sign of age!

I used to think everything was funny. Once I even started laughing during a funeral. Now that was embarrassing. The more I tried to stop, the funnier it all seemed. People were staring at me so I held my hankie over my face and shook until the tears flowed down my cheeks. Half the mourners came over to console me, thinking I was a grieving relative.

My shrink would say that it was just a manifestation of Social Anxiety. Must have been, cause afterwards I can′t even remember what I was laughing about in the first place.

I used to laugh when I, or anyone else, fell down. Falling was like a knee jerk to me. You fall–you laugh. Not anymore. I watch my step very carefully…like I am walking around in a barn yard full of chickens. (If you’ve ever been around chickens, then you know WHY one needs to step carefully).

I finally gave up on writing and decided to take a break and check out my email for the day. I logged into my account and there was enough spam in my inbox to feed a family of twelve.

Most of it was advertisements. Everything from Viagra to detergent.

Then there was all those email from friends. The ones that tell you to read it and forward it to twenty people, within the next three seconds, or the roof would fall in on your head. I delete these emails, but for some odd reason, It bothers me. I feel nervous and I spend the day in constant fear.

Why would my FRIENDS do that? I’m glad I don’t get email from my enemies!

Then there are those email messages that say that if I don’t forward the email it means I don’t love Jesus. Well I do love Jesus but would He really want me to inflict these emails on others?

I do forward the email…to myself…at all my other email accounts on the Internet. I have about thirty now and I usually take one day out of the month to empty them. (note to myself: empty junk email boxes)

Is it any wonder that I’m not feeling too humorous at this point in time?

I sure wish I could talk to Erma…

Leeuna Foster is a Marketing Strategist, Author and Poet. She has been writing for two decades and her short fiction and poetry have won several national and regional awards. If you enjoy Southern Humor, visit her website at: southernfriedwriters.com southernfriedwriters.com

Female Photography Tips

Wednesday, August 30th, 2006

Find a subject
When practicing female photography, use any subject you can, they could be anyone, young or old, your- sister, daughter, mother, spouse, in-law, girlfriend, friend. It’s probably not a good idea to get your family to undress, however. If you are desperate you can hire a model from one of the many female photography modeling agencies worldwide. To get the best results you should make sure your female is okay with you taking pictures of her and that she will be willing to pose for you. Candid shots just won’t cut it.

Set the Scene
This could be anywhere so get creative. Some ideas are in a photography studio, near some foliage (bushes, trees), on a chair or lounger, on the beach or anywhere else you can find. it’s up to you and your subject. Lighting is a lot easier in a photography studio but there is more freedom when it comes to scenery and movement when you are outside the studio.

Lighting
A soft bulbed light is probably going to work better than a flash. It should come from her left or right, rather than shining straight on her. This helps to bring out the much needed detail in the face. You could also bounce the flash off the wall or the ceiling to get the same effect. Another thing you could try is using a soft side light to create shadows and a filler flash to lighten your female’s face. This achieves fine detail with light shadows rather than dark shadows or none at all.

Getting the shot
It is recommended that you use a long lens and move away from you’re subject. Being close and using a short lens can be annoying for your subject and it will distort facial features which is no a desired effect. Use a tripod or put your camera on a surface to get it steady. Use a small aperture and a long shutter speed and ask your subject to remain still. Take as many pictures as you can and get your subject to move and change expression between each shot. Remember that the more pictures you take the better chance you have of getting that perfect picture.

photographertips.net Photography tips, techniques, information, how-tos and guides
Article by Giles Thompson

Using Targeted Rewards To Drive Measurable Results For Your Promotional Marketing

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006

By using a Targeted Reward to improve customer relations while improving marketing ROI, you can directly measure the results. This means that you can then optimize your promotional spending…cut the fat. Internet Marketers know the value of targeted advertising is that you spend less money to attract a new customer, and more importantly you ultimately spend less to keep an existing customer happy. By targeting the reward system around what the customer is passionate about, you actively engage them in promoting Your Brand.

Some businesses already use complex database management tools to figure out what promotional marketing gift to give you instead of just rewarding you with the gift that they can get the best deal on, or you think is cool. If you don’t have a system that will tell you exactly what it is that you should give your customers, just use your common sense. If you take the time to think about each of the people you are going to give a gift to, then you will be able to give them a gift that they are passionate about.

For those of you that have customers that love casino games, now there is a gift that will allow customers to Bring The Casino Experience Home with them, all while promoting your company/product to their friends. That gift is the Executive Gaming Monthly Casino Game of the Month Gift Club. By sending customers Home with everything needed to Host a Home Game version of their favorite casino game, you allow them to practice at home in a non-threatening, comfortable environment with their friends. Between trips to the casino, your customers will become more confident and responsible as a result of them being able to learn the theory behind the game. As a result when they go to the casino they will feel more comfortable at the table, with the Real Value to your business being customers that spend more time and money at your business because you have endeared yourself to them….not to mention the publicity that you will receive because each time your customer practices the game at home, they need to play with their friends which allows new customers to be introduced to your brand.

Eric Hansel is the President of Executive Gaming Monthly….The 1st Casino Game of the Month Gift Club, and the coolest gift around. Eric lives in New Jersey with His wife and Son. To find out more about how Executive Gaming Monthly can help you to optimize your promotional spending check out ExecutiveGamingMonthly.com ExecutiveGamingMonthly.com, or give us a call at 201-927-3526.

Japanese Grammar And Vocabulary Pep Talk Supplement

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006

Memory techniques applying tried and true techniques that are effective in mastering an SL and in particular improving Our Ural Altaic progeny ~ Learn Japanese Now : A useful Grammar, Vocabulary, and Conversation e-course With emphasis on long term retention through effective memorization. The best language acquisition e-course on the net!

Lesson #17 – Putting verbs into the TA –form た-form

The abilitiy to put Japanese verbs into the various bases quickly without pause is a pre-requisite for speaking fluently and being perceived as being a capable conversationalist. Of all the verbs Bases (I, II, III, IV , V, TA, and TE) the TA form ranks high in usage as one of the top three most used bases for verbs only after TE-てand Base-III or root form. I am focusing on it now in order to prepare you for the quick powerful grammar secrets that employ Base TA verbs which will catapult your Japanese speaking ability through the roof. I’ll be discussing many grammar rules that use the verb in Base TA. One of the main things you should know about the TA form of a verb is that it is used to put verbs into past tense plain form. A verb in base TA form is equivalent to English’s have done or past tense perfect. The TA form of a verb has evolved from the classical form tari and it still has many uses (see lesson #23 and #19) Tip #17 How to form Base ta

1. Vowel Stemmed verbs (i.e. those ending in either eru or iru) a. to put a verb into the TA form when the verb has a vowel stem simply add ta Base III Dictionary form Stem Base Ta Meaning

kanjiru kanji kanjita To feel becomes to have felt.

oboeru oboe oboeta To remember becomes to have remembered

kangaeru kangae kangaeta To think becomes to have thought.

deru de deta To leave becomes to have left.

iru i ita To be becomes to have been. (was, were)

Try putting your favorite verb ending in iru or eru into the TA form today and get your Nihongo more Jozu! And remember…

MORE WORDS MEMORIZED = HIGHER RATE of FLUENCY.

Until next time. Ganbatte ne! Do your best! Makurasuki Sensei

jappermon.com jappermon.com